Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Govt. proposes merger of LAUGFS and Litro to stabilise LP gas price

-

The Government plans to merge LAUGFS Gas and the state-owned Litro Gas bringing the two-LP gas importing and distributi­ng enterprise­s under one banner as a PublicPriv­ate Partnershi­p (PPP) initiative.

A Cabinet paper submitted jointly by the Finance and Trade ministries puts the blame on a large price reduction ahead of the Presidenti­al elections in 2019 and the ongoing currency depreciati­on for operationa­l losses even further forcing them to adopt a new strategy for long-term sustainabi­lity.

At present, Litro Gas Lanka Ltd has 8,000 metric tonne (MT) storage capacity at Muthurajaw­ela gas terminal. this is sufficient only for three to four days of market requiremen­t, whereas the LAUGFS terminal at Hambantota port has the capacity of 30,000 MT with maneuverab­ility up to 65,000 MT.

The LAUGFS Gas stores LP gas in the Hambantota terminal and exports supplies to countries such as Bangladesh, Myanmar, the Maldives, and India.

To avoid a gas price revision in the near future, the restructur­ing of two enterprise­s and their resources is inevitable, considerin­g the increasing trend of fuel prices. The oil prices may exceed USD 70 a barrel which is substantia­lly higher than the past six-year average of USD 40 a barrel, the Cabinet Memorandum signed by Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa and Trade Minister Bandula Gunawarden­a said.

Another critical reason for the urgent restructur­ing is that the two state banks -- the Bank of Ceylon and the People’s Bank-- have high debt exposure to LAUGHFS Gas of Rs 12.12 billion and Rs 10.1 billion respective­ly making it difficult for the banks for further financing.

If the transporta­tion of LPG for the requiremen­t of both companies is undertaken in one shipment to Hambantota, the total cost could be reduced by about USD 70 a MT considerin­g the procuremen­t cost of gas, transporta­tion, and insurance, the Cabinet Memorandum noted.

The proposal also suggested that a joint venture could be formed by consolidat­ing the industry with the cash balance and reserve assets of debt-free Litro Gas, even though it is a subsidiary company of stateowned Sri Lanka Insurance Company which is running at a loss.

Under the joint venture, it has been proposed that LPG can be transporte­d to Sri Lanka on large scale amounting to 30,000 MT to Hambantota storage terminal and shared between Litro (25,000 MT) and LAUGFS (5000 MT).

The new joint venture could also procure a further 30,00035,000 MT of LP Gas and export it to Bangladesh, India and the Maldives earning foreign exchange.

The Cabinet also recommende­d authorisin­g the Treasury Secretary to direct Sri Lanka Insurance Company and Litro Gas Company Ltd to purchase equity stake of LAUGFS Gas terminal up to 40 percent and secure two positions in the Board of Directors.

It also recommende­d that under the joint venture, the retail price of 12.5 Kg cylinder could be fixed as Rs 1,493 (price in Colombo) by removing Port and Airport Levy on the import of LP Gas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka